I also plan to produce a critical edition of Burgundio of Pisa’s 12th century translation, the only Latin version available for nearly 300 years, which has never been printed. If all goes well, this book should appear in about 5 years.

The translations are those made in ancient and medieval times, so we may wish him well!

Sorry to freak out in your combox. I’ve been unnerved, lately, because I was reading an NT Wright book about Paul and thus all these mini Paul quotes in Beatus jumped out. Of course, nobody else had noticed them either.

Reading the man is like fishing through a box which you gradually realize has no bottom, because it is actually at the top of an entire basement full of interesting things.

In the process of editing Thomas of Ireland’s Manipulus florum, several of my RAs and I compiled searchable transcriptions of a number of Latin texts, including some by Chrysostom and the Ps.-Chrysostom Opus imperfectum in Mattheum; the PDF files are linked to the MF website’s Auxiliary Resources page:http://web.wlu.ca/history/cnighman/page12.html

We have only Chrysostom’s homilies 1-25 on Matthew interprete Aniano; Migne printed only 1-8 in PG 58; we transcribed both the PG text of 1-8 and all 25 homilies from the 1503 Venice edition.

Bouhot mentions that the complete homilies on Matthew were translated in the 12th century by Burgundio of Pisa, whose translation of the homilies on John will be included on my new website; I am gathering manuscript reproductions now for a critical edition of Burgundio’s translation of the homilies on John, which will probably take about 4-5 years to appear in print. No plans to do the same for the homilies on Matthew.

Just received notice that my grant application to the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada for The Chrysostomus Latinus in Iohannem Online (CLIO) Project was approved. Stay tuned for the launch of a new website and the progressive publication of texts as they are developed by my team.

57 of the 88 homilies have been transcribed for the three Latin versions and provided online, and Greek text excerpts have been done for homilies 1-25. More to follow over the next 2 months, then a hiatus until more funding is obtained.

If further funding can be secured, expect Phase 1 to be completed by Fall 2019.

Phase 2 will seek to replace the transcriptions of Burgundio and Griffolini’s versions with critical editions based on key manuscript witnesses. That will take about 5 years, I expect.

CLIO received a second grant last April and is progressing well, though I’ve had to push the expected completion date back to Dec. 2019. Printed critical editions of Burgundio’s translation (12th cent.) and Griffolini’s version (15th cent.) should appear around 2022/23.

If my application for an internal seed grant is successful, I hope to publish a full transcription from a 13th-century MS by the end of August 2020 on the CLIMO Project website and then apply for a major external grant to further develop that project.